Delicious CORNED BEEF | Brine & Cooking Process
Nebraska Star Beef Nebraska Star Beef
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 Published On Mar 16, 2022

Cousin Steve-O shows us his favorite ways to make Corned Beef. Including three cuts of beef cooked three different ways. Great for any level of cook and a super simple process of making the "brine".

Get all cuts of beef here: nebraskastarbeef.com

Recipe:

To make our brine, we brought approx 2-2.5 quarts or 4 lbs of water to a boil, then added 2 cups of salt, 1 cup of sugar, a 1.5 oz bottle of Pickling Spice (McCormick brand), and 2 oz of 1.25% sodium nitrite cure and stirred while boiling until salt, sugar and sodium nitrate are fully dissolved and the brine has taken on a nice “tea-like” color from the pickling spice. We remove from heat and added and additional 4 lbs of ice to cool the brine to slightly below room temperature.

Next, the cuts need to be submerged in the brine. This can be accomplished in different ways. It is important to use a non-metallic container (stoneware or plastic) as the salt in the brine can react with the metal to give the corned beef a metallic flavor.

We recommend brining for minimum of 7 to 10 days so the sodium nitrate can fully penetrate the cut, brining for a shorter period of time can cause brown (uncured) spots in the center of the cut.

After the corned beef has brined for an adequate period of time, it is time to cook. The traditional way to cook a corned beef is a few hours in a pot of water that is set to a low boil. The corned beef hangs out in this hot bath until the internal temp of the corned beef reaches 195-200° F, at which time it is pulled and rested. This was the method that we used to cook our 4lb Eye of Round Roast, and it came out great!!

We added a couple additional cooking methods that we were curious to try. The most pleasant surprise from our efforts came from the “Instant Pot.” We cooked the Tri-Tip in the Instant Pot with just enough water to cover the beef, plugged it in and pushed the “Meat/Stew” button and in 30 short minutes it was auto venting. We let it hang out on “Keep Warm” for another hour and a half or so, which was probably not necessary, and the results were outstanding. We highly recommend this method, and the Tri-Tip worked exceptionally well as a corned beef cut.

The final method, and definitely most intense in the flavor department was the Brisket Flat on the grill. We seared it and started the cook on our gas grill. It is an infrared grill, so there was little risk of burning the brisket flat and it allows us to apply high heat rapidly. We used the infrared to bring the internal temperature of approximately 160° F, then moved the brisket flat over to the Traeger and finished it to an internal temp. of 195° F on a 250° F smoke. The results were very good. The flavor was much more concentrated than the two corned beefs that were cooked in water, the dry cook increased the flavor from the pickling spice and salt and the smoke from the Traeger was a great addition.

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